Morning Overview on MSN
Blue lava at night is real, and the explanation is even crazier
On the slopes of an Indonesian volcano, rivers of light appear to pour out of the dark, glowing an electric blue that looks ...
ZME Science on MSN
At night, this lava turns blue and it’s not a magic trick
Lava is supposed to be red—that’s volcanoes 101. But at Indonesia’s Kawah Ijen, the Earth decides to break the rules. Instead ...
Methane gas produced by Hawaii's Kilauea volcano has caused rare blue flames to arise from cracks in the pavement. U.S. Geological Survey scientists were able to capture what they called "one of the ...
Photographs shared to social media depicted a volcano in Ethiopia as it “erupts blue lava.” While the two photographs were authentic, they did not show “blue lava” erupting from a single volcano.
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Two of the three main lava channels from the volcanic eruption on Hawaii's Big Island have merged to create only two entry points into the Pacific Ocean, according to USGS scientist Jim Kauahikaua.
Recently, something has been observed “dancing” above the active eruptive vents inside Halema‘uma‘u: hydrogen flames! Let’s take a look into what causes this and other flame phenomenon on volcanoes.
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